‘Slow destruction of humanity': Doctor speaks on hunger crisis in Gaza as Israel denies ‘starvation' claims
Global concern over the humanitarian situation in Gaza has strengthened, especially after Israel and the US appeared to step away from ceasefire talks with Hamas on Friday, stating that the group had made it clear it was not interested in reaching a deal.
Aid organisations said last week that severe hunger is widespread among Gaza's 2.2 million residents, with food supplies running critically low after Israel halted all deliveries in March.
Though aid resumed in May, it came with tighter restrictions.
Dr. Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, deputy medical coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), explained that within the first six to 24 hours without food, the body starts consuming its glycogen stores for energy.
In an Instagram video, Mughaisib said, 'For the past months, I have been surviving on one meal per day. And in the last few days, I have even had only one meal every two days. Not because I cannot afford it, but because there is nothing to buy. The markets are completely empty. We are expected to save lives while our own are slowly being consumed. This is not just about hunger, but about the slow destruction of life, ability, and humanity.'
According to the Gaza Health Ministry, which operates under Hamas, dozens have recently died due to malnutrition. Since the conflict began, a total of 127 people, among them 85 children, have died from hunger-related causes. EDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT - A morgue worker shows journalists the body of 5-month-old baby, Zainab Abu Halib, who died from malnutrition-related causes, according to Dr. Ahmed al-Farah, head of the pediatric department at Nasser Hospital, before her funeral, in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Saturday, July 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Mariam Dagga)
Israel has denied that starvation is occurring in Gaza, saying the aid suspension was intended to increase pressure on Hamas to release the hostages it still holds.
After allowing aid into Gaza in May, Israel claimed there was sufficient food in the territory but accused the United Nations of failing to distribute it properly. In response, the UN stated it was doing its best under the constraints imposed by Israeli restrictions.
The conflict began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants launched a deadly assault in southern Israel, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza.
In the months since, Israel's military campaign against Hamas has killed nearly 60,000 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to health officials in the Hamas-run territory. The offensive has devastated much of Gaza and displaced nearly its entire population.
(With inputs from agencies)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Wire
13 minutes ago
- The Wire
'Not a Side Effect of War': Israeli Human Rights Groups Say Israel Committing Genocide in Gaza
New Delhi: In a first, Tel Aviv-based human rights organisations, B'Tsalem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel, have released statements calling out Israel for committing the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. They have said that Israel has systematically and deliberately targeted Palestinians and that its western allies have the power to stop it. In both their statements, the leading human rights groups have noted that Israel's policy towards Palestinians shifted on October 13, 2023, which marked the beginning of a military onslaught lasting more than 21 months and counting. B'Tsalem stated that it has resulted in mass killing, both directly and through creating unlivable conditions, serious bodily or mental harm to an entire population, decimation of basic infrastructure throughout the Gaza Strip, and forcible displacement on a huge scale, with ethnic cleansing added to the list of official war objectives. "The mass arrests and abuse of Palestinians in Israeli prisons, which have effectively become torture camps, and tearing apart the social fabric of Gaza, including the destruction of Palestinian educational and cultural institutions, compound it. The campaign is also an assault on Palestinian identity itself, through the deliberate destruction of refugee camps and attempts to undermine the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)," it stated. The group also highlighted the failure of the international community in stopping the atrocities, especially the leaders of the Western world, particularly the United States and Europe, who, it said, "share responsibility by providing support that enables Israel's acts of destruction". Meanwhile, Physicians for Human Rights' statement focused on the starvation and killing of children by the Israeli occupation. "Each day, dozens die of malnutrition. Ninety-two percent of infants aged six months to two years don't get enough to eat. At least 85 children have already starved to death. Israel has displaced 9 in 10 Gazans, destroyed or damaged 92% of homes, and left over half a million children without schools or stability. It has wiped out essential health services – including dialysis, maternal care, cancer treatment, and diabetes management," it stated. The organisation said that this was not temporary but a "strategy to eliminate the conditions needed for life". "Even if Israel stops the offensive today, the destruction it has inflicted guarantees that preventable deaths – from starvation, infection, and chronic illness – will continue for years. This is not collateral damage. This is not a side effect of war. It is the systematic creation of unlivable conditions. It is the denial of survivability. It is a genocide," it stated. B'Tsalem further warned that this genocide will not remain confined to the Gaza Strip, and that the actions and underlying mindset driving it may be extended to other areas as well. "The recognition that the Israeli regime is committing genocide in the Gaza Strip, and the deep concern that it may expand to other areas where Palestinians live under Israeli rule, demand urgent and unequivocal action from both Israeli society and the international community," it said. The groups have urged international community to fulfil its duty Ito stop the genocide Israel is carrying out in Gaza. The death toll in Gaza now stands close to 60,000, as per the health ministry data, and the remaining population is on the verge of famine. Over the weekend, Israel announced a few measures to allow aid access, including a limited 10-hour daily "tactical pause" in certain areas of Gaza City. However, there have also been reports Israeli attacks taking place where people were trying to collect aid.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Is Deion Sanders leaving Colorado Buffaloes? Coach Prime to address health concerns in upcoming press conference
Deion Sanders might leave Colorado (Image via Getty Images) Deion Sanders ' offseason has been a little unusual this year because the third-year head coach of the Colorado Buffaloes was recovering from an undisclosed health condition at his Texas home during the summer. After weeks of speculation over his future, he will now meet the media in a much-awaited press conference on Monday at 11 a.m. Mountain Time to provide updates about his health. He will be accompanied by members of his medical team and representatives from CU Anschutz and UCHealth. Deion Sanders set to reveal health battle details and address Colorado exit rumors in press conference Deion Sanders is prepared to discuss his most recent health issue during a news conference on Monday after keeping quiet about it for a long time. His medical team will also join him to discuss the issues. Persistent rumors that he is leaving the Colorado Buffaloes because of his health issues gave rise to uncertainty. The only available information about the coach's health condition is that he shed 14 pounds. However, today's event will correct the record, according to his long-time confidant, "Uncle Neely." Uncle Neely, who has had a tight relationship with the coach during his coaching career, gave a sneak peek at what he might say to the media. He said: 'It was one of those no-camera team meetings so that Coach Prime could talk to the team… He's probably put something out on his Instagram, a clip from Bucky [Deion Sanders Jr.]. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Is it better to shower in the morning or at night? Here's what a microbiologist says CNA Read More Undo He continued: "So tomorrow's press conference, it's just going to be one of those things where a lot of the naysayers and player haters are really going to get to know what's been going on for the past 60 to 90 days with Coach Prime and what he fought through and overcame." Deion Sanders is physically not well (Image Via Getty Images) Deion Sanders has remained rather quiet this offseason despite enduring severe health problems in previous years. He further went through multiple surgeries and the partial amputation of two toes. His lack of participation in summer activities only fueled rumors that his time at Colorado Buffaloes was running out. Understanding the gravity of the situation, his son once said in an emotional video: "Yesterday was tough... because I had to make a will. Fans and experts have been waiting for an explanation ever since. Although Deion Sanders has started sharing videos that show he's reportedly "back and feeling great," it's still unclear what exactly his issues are. Now, everyone is eagerly waiting for some answers. Also read: Jonathan Kuminga draws sign-and-trade interest from Phoenix Suns and Sacramento Kings, delays Golden State Warriors deal Catch Rani Rampal's inspiring story on Game On, Episode 4. Watch Here!


Indian Express
3 hours ago
- Indian Express
Weighing less than her birth weight, Gaza infant starves to death: ‘She needed baby formula'
On a street shattered with rubble in war-torn Gaza, a mother held her five-month-old daughter for the last time. Covered in a thin white cloth, Zainab Abu Halib was not even heavier than anything. She had already died before reaching the pediatric ward of one of the final active hospitals in the Gaza strip. Her mother Esraa bent down and kissed her daughter's cool and shrunken forehead for the last time. Zainab weighed just under 2kg at her death, less than when she was born. Her body bore the starvation, skin stretched over bone, limbs so thin a morgue worker's thumb was wider than her ankles. Her father Ahmed said, 'She needed special baby formula which did not exist in Gaza.' His voice breaking as he stood beside her small, cloth-wrapped body during funeral prayers held in the hospital courtyard. Zainab's story is not unique. She is one of at least 85 children confirmed to have died from malnutrition-related causes during the war in Gaza, according to the territory's Health Ministry. The total number of deaths tied to starvation including adults has risen to 127 with many cases reported only in the past few weeks. Dr Ahmed al-Farah who is the head of pediatrics at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis called Zainab's condition 'severe, severe starvation.' She had been allergic to cow's milk and needed a specialised formula. Without it chronic diarrhea and vomiting weakened her tiny body. As her immune system collapsed and infection set in. Within weeks, she was gone. Her family who were displaced and living in a makeshift tent struggled to find even basic food, let alone the specific formula Zainab needed. Esraa, who is undernourished herself, could only breastfeed her daughter for six weeks. After that there was nothing else left. 'With my daughter's death, many will follow. Our children, whom we carried for nine months, have become just numbers,' Esraa said. Doctors at Nasser Hospital are sounding alarms as cases of acute malnutrition surge. With only eight pediatric beds the department is treating around 60 children in which many laid on extra mattresses on the floor. Another clinic tied to the hospital reports 40 new malnutrition cases weekly. 'Unless the crossings are opened and food and baby formula are allowed in for this vulnerable segment of Palestinian society, we will witness unprecedented numbers of deaths,' Dr al-Farah warned. Humanitarian aid has been slow. Since March after the collapse of the most recent ceasefire, Israel halted the entry of food, fuel, and medicine for over two months to pressure Hamas into releasing hostages. Aid resumed in May but remains insufficient. Israel's Foreign Ministry claims to have allowed around 4,500 aid trucks since then including 2,500 tons of baby food and special formulas. Still, this averages fewer than 70 trucks a day far below the 500 to 600 daily shipments the UN says are needed. The situation has been further more complicated by chaos on the ground. Hungry crowds and desperate gangs often intercept trucks before the food can be distributed. In some cases over 1,000 Palestinians have reportedly been killed while attempting to reach aid. A mother's robe hung loose on her child's frame, her own hunger barely hidden. 'There was a shortage of everything. How can a girl like her recover?' she asked. Last Saturday, Israel announced a new humanitarian pause to allow more aid deliveries, but denied accusations of intentional starvation. A government statement blamed Hamas for manipulating 'images of children suffering from terminal diseases.' (With Associated Press inputs)